At CFP Semifinals, ESPN Again Flexes Its Operational Muscle With 20+ MegaCast Viewing Options
More than 50 cameras will be deployed at Fiesta Bowl and at Peach Bowl
Story Highlights
As the College Football Playoff reaches its penultimate round, ESPN is once again turning the CFP Semifinals into a showcase for large-scale, multiplatform production. On Thursday and Friday, the broadcaster will deploy a MegaCast lineup that features more than 20 total viewing options for the Ole Miss–Miami and Oregon–Indiana matchups, spanning linear networks, digital platforms, and audio outlets.

An ESPN camera sits ready prior to the Fiesta Bowl and the CFP Semifinals at State Farm Stadium. (Photo: Allen Kee / ESPN Images)
The primary game telecasts will air on ESPN, but, as is increasingly the case with the broadcaster’s biggest college-football properties, the broader production story lives in the layers surrounding the main feed. From alternative camera angles and data-rich presentations to personality-driven sideline shows and immersive onsite studio coverage, the CFP Semifinals serve as another proving ground for ESPN’s evolving championship-event playbook.
Technology, Camera Density Drive the Main Telecast
Although the MegaCast garners much attention, the main telecast remains the foundation of everything. It’s a significant technical undertaking: ESPN will deploy more than 50 cameras at each Semifinal venue, building an extensive acquisition footprint designed to support both the primary broadcast and the full MegaCast ecosystem.
Among the specialty tools are eight end-zone pylon cameras, wireless line-to-gain pylons on both sidelines, goal-post cameras, and robotic goal-line systems positioned to deliver precision angles at the end-zone plane. Referee-mounted cameras will again provide first-person perspectives on close calls and ball-spotting situations.
Shallow–depth-of-field wireless gimbal cameras will be incorporated for post-play and celebration coverage, adding a cinematic layer to the live presentation.
Returning this year is the use of JokeyCam wearable technology, provided by Povora, with cameras placed on the umpire’s hat. The AI-stabilized POV systems are designed to deliver uniquely immersive looks at decisive moments, offering angles that traditional fixed cameras simply cannot replicate. The wearable feeds will again be integrated into the broader “Connected Cam” presentation environment.
The camera complement not only feeds the main telecast but also supplies the raw material for ESPN’s various alternative viewing experiences — underscoring how MegaCast is built on a single, deeply layered acquisition strategy.
Field Pass Anchors the Alternative-Feed Strategy
One of the cornerstones of ESPN’s MegaCast approach returns this year, with Field Pass With The Pat McAfee Show offering an alternative broadcast of each CFP Semifinal on ESPN2. The sideline-based, roaming production will originate from State Farm Stadium in Glendale, AZ, for the Vrbo Fiesta Bowl and from Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta for the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.
From a production standpoint, Field Pass continues to represent a different kind of alternative presentation: one built less around camera isolation and more around access, atmosphere, and personality. The format relies on a free-flowing, in-venue style that blends traditional broadcast infrastructure with a looser, shoulder-mounted approach, creating a viewing experience distinctly different from the main game telecast.
ACC Network will deploy the Field Pass model in Glendale, presenting Field Pass With ACC Huddle live from the sidelines. The effort integrates the conference network’s traveling studio operation directly into game action, extending the MegaCast concept deeper into conference-centric storytelling.
A Wide Menu of Alternative Presentations
Beyond Field Pass, ESPN’s CFP Semifinal MegaCast will once again feature a diverse slate of alternative feeds tailored to different audience segments and viewing habits.
SkyCast returns as one of the most established options, providing a continuous overhead perspective that tracks offensive formations and play development while still incorporating replays. Command Center offerings will deliver a multi-box environment, presenting several camera angles at once alongside real-time data and statistics.
For viewers interested in the tactical side of the game, the All-22 feed will be available via ESPN Unlimited, offering a high, wide vantage point that keeps all 22 players in frame, closely mirroring the way coaches and players study film.
Both Semifinals will be produced in 4K UHD, continuing ESPN’s effort to pair its highest-profile college-football games with premium-format coverage. The 4K presentations will deliver enhanced resolution, color depth, and overall image clarity, particularly valuable given the density of camera systems deployed.
Customized audio remains a significant part of the MegaCast ecosystem. ESPN Radio will carry both games nationwide across more than 400 affiliates and digital audio platforms, and hometown radio integrations will allow fans to pair local calls with national-level video production. Spanish-language presentations will be available across both Semifinals via ESPN Deportes and the ESPN App.
In addition, halftime marching-band performances will once again be streamed on the ESPN App, giving those elements their own distribution platform and extending MegaCast beyond the game clock.
Onsite Studio Operations Expand Production Footprint
Surrounding the games themselves, ESPN and its conference networks will maintain a substantial onsite studio presence. College GameDay Built by The Home Depot will originate from both Semifinal locations, continuing the show’s Playoff format of event-centric editions tied directly to CFP venues.
College Football Live will be produced on location for both games, extending ESPN’s live-studio-show footprint into the afternoons and creating a continuous programming arc that blends traditional studio analysis with in-stadium storytelling.
SEC Network will base its operations in Glendale, delivering a full slate of Fiesta Bowl–related pre/postgame programming from the field. The effort reflects the network’s event-immersion strategy, with studio shows, halftime coverage, and postgame analysis all deploying a live, onsite workflow.
ACC Network will establish an onsite presence around Miami’s Semifinal appearance, beginning midweek and continuing through game day. The network’s programming plan of multiple live shows from the stadium leading into kickoff, followed by extended postgame coverage, reinforces the role of conference networks as both content creators and storytelling extensions of ESPN’s broader CFP operation.